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Royals agree to 1-year deal with OF Lane Thomas

KANSAS CITY -- The Royals have agreed to a one-year, $5.25 million deal with veteran outfielder Lane Thomas, sources told MLB.com on Thursday night.

The club has not confirmed the contract, which is pending a physical and includes $1 million in incentives. The Royals are at 38 players on their 40-man roster, so a corresponding move is not needed.

The 30-year-old Thomas is a buy-low bounceback candidate and a right-handed hitter who can play center field, all items the Royals were searching for when looking at the free-agent market for outfielders who can provide some length to the bottom of their lineup. They missed out on re-signing Mike Yastrzemski, who inked a two-year, $23 million contract with the Braves on Wednesday, but had a list of free agents to continue to go after as they left the Winter Meetings.

Thomas spent the last year and a half with the Guardians and went through several ups and downs. After joining Cleveland in a Trade Deadline deal with the Nationals in 2024 -- the Royals expressed interest in adding him then, too -- the outfielder batted .148 in his first 29 games for Cleveland. But he turned it on in September, with a .560 slugging percentage, and Thomas’ grand slam in Game 5 of the ALDS against Detroit and Tarik Skubal helped send the Guardians to the ALCS. There, Thomas’ double preceded a game-tying home run by Jhonkensy Noel in the bottom of the ninth in Game 3 against the Yankees, which the Guardians won in 10 innings.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


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Re: General Discussion

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Lots of relievers acquired. The two interesting ones are
Long ago Cleveland draft pick Shane Armstrong this year's equivalent of last two year's signings of over the hill closers. Except Armstrong had one of his best seasons last year.
If I recommend correctly we drafted him the same year as Cody Allen who came and went as our closer quite a while ago.

Peyton Pallette, has been rated among top 10 prospects for his former club and spotted in at No. 18 now for Cleveland.

Barsted and Holderman are a couple of not very exciting picks as were Festa and Kent when we signed them last year.
Briehl a lefty is even less exciting. And now that Armstrong is coming on board someone will have to be DFAd.
Since Noel is gone already, next will either be the least inspiring of these new old relievers or JRod

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Return of Shane Armstong caused me to look up the draft where he and Allen and Cody Anderson were the 3 A's among the draft picks
A pretty solid crop of Cleveland picks in 2011:

1st round: LIndor quite possibly Hall of Fame
way down in the 20's: Cody Allen had a very fine career and is on to other things
Armstrong solid long-time middle reliever
Cody Anderson, Ryan Merrit and Shawn Morimando all had some major league starts
Eric Haase long time part time C, 1B, DH, sometimes OF.

Even though the draft was marred by $1,8M signing of 2nd round high school pitcher Dillon Howard who showed up in camp out of shape, had PED issues, and was gone within a couple brief seasons. Then went to college and played a little football. One of our biggest disaster picks.

Re: General Discussion

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Return of Shane Armstong caused me to look up the draft where he and Allen and Cody Anderson were the 3 A's among the draft picks
A pretty solid crop of Cleveland picks in 2011:

1st round: LIndor quite possibly Hall of Fame
way down in the 20's: Cody Allen had a very fine career and is on to other things
Armstrong solid long-time middle reliever
Cody Anderson, Ryan Merrit and Shawn Morimando all had some major league starts
Eric Haase long time part time C, 1B, DH, sometimes OF.

Even though the draft was marred by $1,8M signing of 2nd round high school pitcher Dillon Howard who showed up in camp out of shape, had PED issues, and was gone within a couple brief seasons. Then went to college and played a little football. One of our biggest disaster picks.

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Mets Interested In Austin Hays

The Mets have interest in free agent outfielder Austin Hays, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. Hays was previously connected to the Royals but that was before Kansas City signed Lane Thomas and acquired Isaac Collins.

Kyle Tucker and Cody Bellinger still on the open market

An outfielder who can crush lefties is still worth something. The Mariners just gave Rob Refsnyder $6.25MM for a similar profile.

The Mets have also been frequently connected to Luis Robert Jr. in rumors. He has flashed a borderline MVP upside but has been fairly Hays-ian in the past two years. He has struggled to stay on the field and provided subpar offense but with big numbers against lefties.

Harrison Bader still unsigned among a dwindling group of available options in free agency.

Diamondbacks’ Ketel Marte is unlikely to land in Atlanta

[ The window for adding some offense is slowly closing ]

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


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Guardians To Sign Pedro Avila

By Nick Deeds | December 28, 2025 at 9:18am CDT

The Guardians are in agreement with right-hander Pedro Avila on a one-year, split contract, according to Daniel Alvarez-Montes of El Extrabase. The deal is a split contract, though the exact salary figures he’ll make in the majors and minors are not yet known.

Avila, 29 next month, was designated for assignment by the Guardians less than a year ago. He caught on with the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball not long after that, and went on to make 15 appearances for the Swallows in Central League play. Avila posted the results of a back-end starter in those outings, with a 4.04 ERA in 82 1/3 innings of work. While he struck out just 17.8% of his opponents, he generated a solid 43.9% ground ball rate and held opponents to an 8.7% walk rate. None of those numbers jump off the page on their own, but an impressive ability to limit home runs and hard contact allowed Avila to post a 3.09 FIP with a 3.38 xFIP during his time overseas.

Now that he’s returning stateside, Avila will get the opportunity to establish himself at the big league level. The righty signed with the Nationals out of Venezuela as an amateur back in 2015, but came up primarily through the Padres’ system and made his big league debut in San Diego back in 2019. He spent most of his career with the Padres, but didn’t get a significant look at the big league level until 2023, when he pitched to a solid 3.22 ERA with a 3.67 FIP in 50 1/3 innings of work as a swing man for San Diego. A rough start to the 2024 campaign saw the Padres cut Avila loose, however, and he was acquired by the Guardians in the middle of April 2024 as part of a minor trade.

Upon arriving in Cleveland, Avila served as a solid long relief option. The right-hander soaked up 74 2/3 innings of work across just 50 appearances with a 23.0% strikeout rate against a 9.4% walk rate. All told, his work in Cleveland was good for a 3.25 ERA and 3.76 FIP, and both those figures landed a solid amount above league average. That seemed likely to make Avila an easy choice to keep in the fold for 2025, but the Guardians made the surprising call to cut him loose last winter. Perhaps that was in part due to the fact that Avila was out of options, and as a result would have to be exposed to waivers in order to option him to the minor leagues.

This split contract offers a potential avenue towards using Avila as an up-and-down player this year despite his lack of options. By guaranteeing the right-hander a salary above the minor league rate and a larger sum of money for time in the majors, the Guardians make Avila a somewhat less attractive possible waiver claim for rival clubs. That should make Avila more likely to clear waivers if passed through, while also making Avila less likely to elect free agency if he successfully clears waivers. That’s because the right-hander would have to leave his guaranteed money with the Guardians on the table in order to depart via minor league free agency, something the righty is unlikely to be inclined towards doing. In other words, the split nature of the contract affords Avila a 40-man roster spot and a more significant salary than he otherwise would have made in both the major and minor leagues, while for the Guardians it creates additional roster flexibility that should be valuable to a club with a deep bullpen that lacks many candidates to be optioned.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


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Report: Guardians Expected To Pass On Top Free Agent Hitters

December 28, 2025

By Ernesto Cova


The Cleveland Guardians need as much help as they can get on offense. Unfortunately, the front office may not have gotten that memo.

They’ve focused on bringing several relievers, but they have yet to address their needs on offense. According to team insider Paul Hoynes, that’s not likely to change any time soon.

In his latest column, he said what most fans feared. They’re not going to be in the mix for any big-name slugger:
“No one expects the Guardians to bid on the prime free-agent hitters still on the market — Kyle Tucker, Bo Bichette, Cody Bellinger and Alex Bregman. But other free agents have signed or are still available that could fill the role. On the trade front, hitters have been moved who could have easily helped the Guardians,” Hoynes wrote.
Of course, this shouldn’t be a surprise at this point. If anything, that’s the way this team has operated for most of its history.

Granted, it’s hard to argue with the results. Their farm system is the gift that just keeps on giving, and the Guardians have a plethora of young talent to compete next season. Also, they’ve been a playoff team more often than not despite having one of the cheapest payrolls in the game.

The Guardians are putting all of their hopes in the rookies. George Valera and C.J. Kayfus proved to be worth a shot last season, and Chase DeLauter can be a major factor if he stays healthy — which is admittedly a big ‘if.’ They can also rely on Travis Bazzana is the former No. 1 pick gets the nod.

That’s a risky bet for a team that ranked near the bottom in most offensive categories last season. Even so, the fans shouldn’t get their hopes up or expect anything but minor moves to make the team marginally better.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO